Title: IOP
1TACTICDirect measurements of nuclear
astrophysics reactions
Alison Laird
7/04/09
1
IOP
2Overview
- Nuclear Astrophysics Why? What? How?
- Case study - 8Li(a,n)11B
- TACTIC design
- Beam tests
- Current challenges
- Future plans
3Nuclear Astrophysics What?
http//ie.lbl.gov/systematics/chart2000g.pdf
What reactions are important in stars and stellar
explosions? What are the conditions? What are
the reaction rates? What impact do they have?
3
4Nuclear Astrophysics Why?
BIG QUESTIONS! How are the elements in the
Universe formed? Why does the chart of the
abundances look like it does? What are the sites
of nucleosynthesis? What can primordial
nucleosynthesis tell us about the Big Bang?
4
5Nuclear Astrophysics How?
- Direct or Indirect?
- Indirect use nuclear physics techniques to
determine parameters - (energy states, spin/parity, widths, etc) to
enable us - to calculate the reaction rate
- (typically) uses existing beams and techniques
- high cross sections
- but requires significant interpretation
- Direct study the reaction as it actually happens
in the star! - (little (nuclear) model interpretation required)
- but technically very challenging
5
6Explosive Nucleosynthesis
- Explosive astrophysical environments
- Supernovae
- core collapse - massive stars
- thermonuclear binary system
- Novae and X-ray bursters
- thermonuclear binary system
- Conditions
- high temperatures
- high densities
- short timescales
- (high neutron flux)
- Nuclear processes
- r, rp, ap, p,..
7Reaction rates
Courtesy of M.Aliotta
So reaction dominated by small energy region
8Typical Gamow peak energies
Quiescent nucleosynthesis p p - 5 keV
(helium burning) 14N(p,g)15O - 25 keV (hydrogen
burning) Explosive nucleosynthesis 14N(p,g)15O
- 170 keV (novae) 18F(p,a)15O 250 keV
(novae) 18Ne(a,p)21Na 1300 keV (x-ray
bursts) 44Ti(a,g)48Cr 3700 keV (supernovae)
9Direct Techniques Experimental Nuclear
Astrophysics at low energies
- Studying directly key nuclear reactions for
nucleosynthesis and energy generation in
explosive sites novae, supernovae and X-ray
bursters - Experimental conditions
- Beam energies about 0.1 2 MeV/u ( up to few
109 K ) - Charged particle energies of few MeV down to
100 keV - Radioactive beams high background, low
intensity - Cross sections can be low - lt mbarn
- Hydrogen or helium target
- Need low detection threshold
- Need high rate capability
- Gas target
TACTIC!
10Case study
11Case study r-process
rapid-neutron capture process thought to be
responsible for 50 -70 of elements heavier than
iron. Sequence of neutron captures and b-decays
far from stability in high neutron flux
environment (favoured site - supernova).
But.
11
12Case study r-process seed nuclei
.. To understand r-process abundances need to
understand production of seed nuclei.
a(t,g)7Li(n,g)8Li(a,n)11B
13Case study 8Li(a,n)11B
Significant discrepancies between existing data
sets. Possible resonances. Lowest (most
important) energies not covered by existing data.
H. Ishiyama et al. 2006
23/09/08
13
STFC PRD - Laird
14TACTIC Design
15TACTIC TRIUMF Annular Chamber for Tracking and
Identification of Charged particles
16Key design features
Cylindrical design maximise beam
intensity Radial drift field maximise event
rate without pile up GEM amplification lowering
detection threshold Flash ADC readout full
pulse shape analysis
16
17Cathode cage
18Initial beam tests
19ISAC radioactive beam facility at TRIUMF
11B and 14N beams from OLIS Systematic studies
at a variety of pressures and voltages
20Initial TACTIC tests
Online track reconstruction
20
21TACTIC Tests
SIM.
DATA
DATA
21
2213 MeV 11B, 403 mbar
23Recoil sims
4He
16O
243.5 MeV 14N, 121 mbar
253.5 MeV 14N, 66 mbar
26Pulse shapes alpha source
3.5 MeV a source 1017 mbar lt 500 keV deposited
per pad Clear peaks, good timing and track
reconstruction.
27Pulse shapes 14N beam, 66 mbar
Signalnoise 4 gt poor timing gt poor track
reconstruction BUT detection of signals with
energy deposited per pad approx. 70 keV NEXT
STEPS reduce noise and improve PSA algorithms
28Current challenges
29- Energy calibration
- a designing automated rig to calibrate each pad
- position dependence of GEM response
- Tracking techniques
- Missing energy reconstruction of energy lost
within cage - Timing drift field
- Anode pitch
- Triggering
- Firmware issues
- Crossing between modules
- Stability
- Strange things in the data.
30(No Transcript)
31The future
- April 09
- Firmware tests
- Gamma coincidences
- June 09
- First radioactive tests
- New cathode cage arrangement
- GEM readout
- Ongoing
- Calibration techniques
- Firmware development
- Simulation and analysis software development
- Analysis of tests at Notre Dame
- Future plans
- Second GEM lower energies, smaller pads?
- Silicon detector
32Experimental programme
First experiment 8Li(a,n)11B Beam already
available at required intensity. 7Be(p,p)
pp-chains approved (L. Buchmann) Will require
development of hydrogen target 18Ne(a,p)21Na
breakout from HCNO cycles in X-ray bursts Will
require auxilliary silicon detectors 13N(a,p)16O
X-ray bursts 12C12C hydrostatic and
explosive hydrogen burning Will require
windowless target region and solid cathode
33Thank you for your attention
- The TACTIC collaboration
- A. M. Laird, S. P. Fox, P. Mumby-Croft, B. Hide
- University of York, U.K.
- P. Amaudruz, L. Buchmann, U. Hager, L. Martin, P.
Machule, - R. Openshaw, G. Ruprecht, A. Shotter, P. Walden
- TRIUMF, Canada